The Falconbrook, once a southwest London brook has been slightly replaced by
surface water drains. Mainly, however, its course forms a gentle valley
with an occasional colloquial name and hosts a mid-Victorian solution to the then extent of urbanisation. When London's later growth is considered this solution, a
combined sewer, leads to the Thames-side Southern Low Level Sewer in the
London sewerage system which is insufficient when it rains (it overflows into the
tidal Thames). To make this (and others) sufficient and account for its rainwater intake, the
Thames Tideway Tunnel is expected to be complete in 2025. The source of the Falconbrook was
Streatham Hill, with an additional source to the west at Furzedown south of
Tooting Bec Common. From its source the Falconbrook flowed west through Balham, then turned north one residential block before
Wandsworth Common as it was joined by the Tooting Bec feeder and continues to carve a ravine which is formed by St John's Road and Northcote Road in
Battersea Rise. Springs feeding the first drain underneath the foundations of a row of shops (numbers 2–36 Streatham High Road, the
A23 road). During their construction, extra access space was built below the basement floors to accommodate the springs when in full spate. The brook flowed (and now sewer flows) along Drewstead Road, past Woodfield Avenue, passed through the north of Tooting Bec Common, north down Cavendish Road (passing
Weir Road), west along the approximate line of Kenilford Road, along Oldridge Road, turned north by Holy Ghost School, west of Rusham and Montholme Road and along Northcote Road, 8-11m
AOD. After St John's Road it flowed along Falcon Road,
Battersea just before its end turned west emptying in the tidal Thames west of Lombard Road and north of the London Heliport. This point is the western corner of Battersea, on the border with
Wandsworth Town; the rest of the shared border runs along the top of the valley's western side. ==Names and etymology==